We have researched the bloodlines of our stallions and provide the information we have obtained to visitors of this website. The stallions are broken down by bloodline. Many of these fine stallions are now AQHA legends. Pictures have been included where obtainable. Use the links at left to research a particular bloodline or scroll down.....

King Line

King P-234

1932-1958

Traveler

Little Joe

Jenny

Zantanon

Billy

Jeanette

Sykes Rondo Mare

Yellow Jacket

Strait Horse

Gardner Mare

Jabalina

Traveler

Bay Mare

Unknown

Once proclaimed as the greatest horse of his time, King has become one of the American Quarter Horse industry's cornerstones. While he never won any performance points, King established a dynasty. He sired 20 AQHA Champions, 84 Performance Registers of Merit, 12 Racing Registers of Merit, three Superior Halter Award winners and 10 Superior Performance Award winners. At the time that King was born, there wasn't an American Quarter Horse Association. However, his conformation would later set the standard for American Quarter Horse judging for more than a decade. King died of a heart attack in 1958 but even now, the American Quarter Horse industry is influenced by third, fourth and fifth generation King-bred horses.

Poco Bueno

1944-1969

Little Joe

Zantanon

Jeanette

King P-234

Strait Mare

Jabalina

Bay Mare

Little Joe

Poco Bueno Unregistered

Virginia D

Miss Taylor

Hickory Bill

Hickory Bill Mare

Unknown

Foaled April 10, 1944. He was purchased by E. Paul Waggoner in 1945 for $5,700 and he stood 14.3 hands and weighed 1,150 pounds. His show career started when he was named champion yearling stallion at the Texas Cowboy Reunion Quarter Horse Show in Stamford. He was grand champion stallion in the '40's at Denver's National Western Stock Show, the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show in Fort Worth, State Fair of Texas in Dallas and the American Royal Livestock Show in Kansas City. As a 4-year-old, in 1948, Poco Bueno started his performance career as a cutting horse, and his amazing ability helped him to quickly acquire an impressive record - and a legion of fans. After AQHA started keeping show records in 1951, Waggoner sent Poco Bueno back out to earn the title of AQHA Champion, which he earned at the same time as his daughter, Poco Lena. Perhaps one of the most successful matings of Poco Bueno was that with a plain headed mare named Sheilwin. This produced the mares Poco Tivio and Poco Lena. Poco Lena was described as having the head of a princess and the rump of a washer woman. She was a legendary cutting horse and has been inducted into the AQHA Hall of Fame. Poco Tivio also contributed to the breed by giving us the foals Peponita, Doc's Lynx, Doc's Hotrodder, and Doc's Prescription. Poco Bueno sired 405 registered foals. Thirty-six became AQHA Champions. Poco Lena, Poco Mona, and Poco Stampede have all been inducted into the NCHA Hall of Fame.

Leo San

1949

Joe Reed

Joe Reed II

Nellene

Leo

Fleeting Time (TB)

Little Fanny

Little Red Nell

San Siemon

San Sue Darks

Little Sue

Mr. San Peppy

Joe Reed II

Leo

Little Fanny

Leo San

San Siemon

San Sue Darks

Little Sue

Macanudo

Pep Up

Petra R2

Peppy Belle

Gold Rush

Belle Burnett

Triangle Lady 9

Mr. San Peppy was a great grandson of Macanudo (an offspring produced from the breedings of Old Sorrel to a thoroughbred mare). Tio Kleberg stated "Mr San Peppy had conformation, disposition, and tremendous athletic ability. We didn't know he was going to be a sire. But, by the time his third foal crop arrived, we were starting to train some of his foals and realized he was a superior individual who would add to our genetics what we wanted in our horses." Mr San Peppy had more than $107,000 in National Cutting Horse Association earnings and sired more than 1,300 registered foals. He died in 1998. In 2003, half of the King Ranch's broodmares carried Mr San Peppy's blood; the other half carried that of his son, Peppy San Badger aka Little Peppy. "Mr. San Peppy and Little Peppy were two different horses, " Tio says. "Mr San Peppy was very rugged, a tough kind of a horse. The faster and dirtier the calves were, the harder he worked. Little Peppy was more like a ballerina - very agile and light-footed."

Peppy San Badger

Leo

Leo San

San Sue Darks

Mr. San Peppy

Pep Up

Peppy Belle

Belle Burnett

Grey Badger II

Grey Badger III

Mary Greenock (TB)

Sugar Badger

Lucky Jim

Sugar Townley

RJ Clark Mare

San Siemon

Three Bars Line

Three Bars

1940-1968

Ballot

Midway

Thirty-Third

Percentage

Bulse

Gossip Avenue

Rosewood

Ultimus

Luke McLuke

Midge

Myrtle D

Patriot

Civil Maid

Civil Rule

Lightning Bar

AQHA Champion 1955

Midway

Percentage

Gossip Avenue

Three Bars

Luke McLuke

Myrtle D

Civil Maid

Flying Squirrel (TB)

Doc Horn

Debutante (TB)

Della P

Old DJ (U)

Mare by Old DJ

Unknown Mare

Doc Bar

Percentage

Three Bars

Mrytle D

Lightning Bar

Doc Horn

Della P

Mare by Old DJ

My Texas Dandy

Texas Dandy

Streak

Dandy Doll

Bartender II

Bar Maid F

Nelly Bly

Although not bred to be a cow horse, Doc Bar is best remembered as the horse which revolutionized the cutting horse industry. By Lightning Bar and out of Dandy Doll, Doc Bar was bred for speed, but only won $95 in four starts. Doc Bar wasn't a performance horse either but turned out to be a good halter horse and an excellent sire whose foal crops totally redefined the sport of cutting. Not only did his sons and daughters find success in the cutting arena, but they also found success in other performance events including working cow horse, reining and western pleasure. According to AQHA records, Doc Bar sired 485 foals which earned over 7,000 halter and performance points and 27 AQHA Champions. Doc Bar is credited with bringing a totally different look to cutting horses and for putting the sweeping motion into the cutting horses of today.

Plaudit Line

Plaudit

1930-1958

Himyar

Plaudit

Unknown

King Plaudit (TB)

Knight of the Thistle

Wild Thistle

Unknown

Old Fred

Old Nick

Silver Tail Mare

Colorado Queen

Silver Tail

Silver Tail Mare

Unknown

Plaudit had no official racing record but the good blood that came down to him from both his parents undoubtedly gave him speed. By the time official quarter tracks were established, Plaudit was long past his racing prime. He stood 15 hands and weighed about 1050 pounds carrying long muscling on a lengthy body that was better fronted and higher withered than today's Quarter Horses. He had a marvelous shoulder and arm, and the long line of his croup appears to have been nearly level. Plaudit sired many good offspring. It was here that he sired Question Mark, out of the mare Pepito (TB). Question Mark could surely run. In his last, and most famous race, he defeated the great Shue Fly. During the race however, his pastern bone snapped and he still finished the race on heart and three legs, beating the unbeatable mare. He sired Gold Mount, who later sired Maddon's Bright Eyes, inducted into the AQHA Hall of Fame in 1997.

Joe Reed Line

Joe Reed

Joe Blair (TB)

Della Moore

Joe Reed II

1936-1962

1942-43 World Champion Quarter Running Stallion

Bonnie Joe

Joe Blair (TB)

Miss Blair

Joe Reed

P-3

Old DJ

Della Moore

La Hernandez

High Time

Fleeting Time (TB)

British Fleet

Nellene

Brown Billy

Little Red Nell

Red Nell

Leo

1940-1967

Joe Blair (TB)

Joe Reed P-3

Della Moore

Joe Reed II

Fleeting Time (TB)

Nellene

Little Red Nell

Joe Blair (TB)

Joe Reed P-3

Della Moore

Little Fanny

Ashwell (TB)

Fanny Ashwell

Fanny Richardson

In the early years of the American Quarter Horse industry, Leo was known primarily as a sizzling speed horse. Later, he gained a hefty reputation of being a leading sire. Both his sons and daughters excelled on the track and in the show ring. The many titles won by Leo's offspring proved he not only sired speed, but also athletic ability, including 24 AQHA Champions, 33 Performance Registers of Merit, 211 Race Registers of Merit, four Superior Halter Awards, two Superior Performance Awards, eight Superior Race Awards, one Supreme Champion and four Racing World Champions. These traits were passed down from generation to generation and many of Leo's sons and daughters became leading producers of quality foals. Although no one knows for sure, Leo reportedly won 20 of 22 races in his career but he will most be remembered for his outstanding offspring which have strengthened the American Quarter Horse industry.

The Doc Bar Descendants - In the 1970's,Doc Bar was known for his halter get but not his performance. Fizzabar, a Doc Bar daughter finished in the NCHA top 10 in 1967 but trainers hardly noticed the Doc Bar bloodlines until 1970 when Doc O' Lena, ridden by Shorty Freeman, won the NCHA futurity with a perfect score. His brother, Dry Doc, won in 1971 and a daughter of Doc O' Lena, Lenaette, carried Freeman to the NCHA title again in 1975. Horses with Doc Bar blood in them won the NCHA futurity six times in the 1970's. (Reference Horseman Magazine, 1980 Issue, Syndication of Doc O'Lena by David Gaines) Another Doc O' Lena son, Smart Little Lena, would become the first horse to win the NCHA triple crown.

Doc O' Lena

NCHA Futurity Champion with a perfect score in four go-rounds

AQHA Hall of Fame

Syndicated for $2.1 Million in 1978

Three Bars

Lightning Bar

Della P

Doc Bar

Texas Dandy

Dandy Doll

Bar Maid F

King

Poco Bueno

Miss Taylor

Poco Lena

Pretty Boy

Sheilwin

Blackburn Mare

Dry Doc

A full brother to Doc O' Lena and winner of the NCHA futurity in 1971, just one year after Doc O' Lena won it.

Doc O Dynamite

Lightning Bar

Doc Bar

Dandy Doll

Doc O Lena

Poco Bueno

Poco Lena

Sheilwin

Three Bars

Gay Bar Dixie

Gay Bar King

Gay Widow

Little Dixie Lee

Dixie's Roper

Billie's Betty

Doc O Dynamite was known as one of Montana's most versatile sires. He had an outstanding show record himself and there will be no more of his babies as he was put down in 2003. These horses are quick and most recently there are some Doc O Dynamite babies out there that are earning some money barrel racing.

Performance statistics include Big Sky Select 5-Year-Old Non-Pro Maturity Reserve Champion and 3rd in the Big Sky 4-Year-Old Open Derby. An Equi-Stat All-time Leading Cutting Sire; Sire of earners of over $684,000 in AQHA, NRHA, and NCHA sanctioned events; 28 AQHA point-earners. He has sired champions in cutting, reining, roping and barrel racing. In addition to his cutting and reining offspring earnings, one barrel horse has earned $200,000, and his get have earned almost $100,000 in roping. Sire of winning barrel horses including Easy Does it Doc, earner of $200,000.

Fannys Oskar

NCHA earner of $180,050.00 and was Reserve Champion at the 1982 Open NCHA Cutting Horse Futurity and place 8th in 1983 at the NCHA Open Cutting Horse Derby. Fannys Oskar's offspring have earned a total of 252.5 AQHA points and $189,066.05 in NCHA competition.

Docs Jack Sprat

Docs Prescription

Doc Tari

Peppy San Badger Descendants (Peppy San Badger and Doc Bar matings)

Paddys Irish Whiskey

Paddy's Irish Whiskey (Peppy San Badger - Docs Starlight by Doc Bar) was purchased from the John Scott sale for $560,000 and was then syndicated for over a million dollars. He is a full brother to Grays Starlight (deceased), Badgers Starlight and Gallo Del Cielo and stands at the Four Sixes Ranch in Texas with a stud fee of $4,100 (2003 reference). Paddy's Irish Whiskey is a AQHA Reserve World Champion sire who has performers in cutting, reining, reined cowhorse, roping, and versatility ranch competitions. People are pleased with the versatility and minds of his good colts.

Grays Starlight

Grays Starlight is a full brother to Paddys Irish Whiskey. Badger Starlight and Gallo Del Cielo are also full brothers to these horses. Note the striking resemblance of our stud, Surefine Whiskey, to Grays Starlight at left.

Surefine Whiskey

Others

Easy Jet

Perhaps no other racing American Quarter Horse has had a greater or more controversial racing career than Easy Jet. During his 2-year-old campaign, he was loaded into the gates 26 times, a feat that some think would have crippled most juveniles. Despite the criticism, he won 22 races that year, including the All American, Kansas, Sunland Fall, Columbus Triple Crown and the All-American Quarter Horse Congress Futurities. He was named World Champion Quarter Running Horse, Champion Stallion and Champion 2-Year-Old Colt. He hit the track again as a 3-year-old and was just as successful, attaining the titles of World Champion Racing American Quarter Horse and Champion Quarter Running 3-Year-Old Colt. He retired with 38 career starts that included 27 firsts, seven seconds and two thirds. As a sire, Easy Jet was equally impressive. By the end of 1993, his direct offspring had earned more than $25 million on the track. Additionally, he had sired more than 1,500 horses who had gained their Registers of Merit.

Hollywood Jac 86

Master Boot Jac

King

Easter King

Gocha H

Hollywood Jac 86

Hollywood Gold

Miss Hollywood

Miss Buggins 86

Bee Line

Nifty Bee

Nifty Lady X3

Double Dee Miss

Bee Line

Boogie Bee

Bogle's Babe

Easter King

Hollywood Gold

Colonel Freckles (1973-1986)

1976 NCHA Open Futurity Champion

Colonel Freckles, sired by Jewel's Leo Bars out of a daughter of Rey Jay, won the 1976 NCHA Futurity. This was considered to be one of the toughest Futurities in the history of the event as the field included such exceptional cutting horses as Freckles Playboy, Doc's Oak, Doc's Remedy, Doc's Hickory, Doc's Mohagany, Montana Doc, Wyoming Doc, Doc Athena and Smooth Herman.

Three Bars (TB)

Sugar Bars

Frontera Sugar

Jewels Leo Bars "Freckles"

Leo

Leo Pan

Panchita

Rey Del Rancho

Rey Jay

Calandria K

Christy Jay

Leo Bob

Christy Carol

Mike's Dilly

Colonel Lil, a daughter from his first foal crop, won the 1981 NCHA futurity. Though Colonel Freckles died in 1986, he was listed in 1997 issues of the Quarter Horse News as:

The first time I ever saw him was at the 1976 NCHA Futurity where he and Lynx Becky were Co-Reserve Champs. Colonel Freckles was the Champion. I actually always thought that Lynx Becky should have won, Freckles Playboy second and Colonel Freckles, third...but they didn't ask me to judge it :o)

A few weeks later, Freckles Playboy easily won the AQHA Jr. Cutting at the Sand Hills Rodeo and Stock Show at Odessa, Texas. Mr San Peppy Won the Senior cutting. Back in those days, they had a work-off between the Jr. & Sr. winners for the Champion Cutting Horse of the show. Freckles Playboy was young and bright...

Three Bars (TB)

Sugar Bars

Frontera Sugar

Jewels Leo Bars "Freckles"

Leo

Leo Pan

Panchita

Rey Del Rancho

Rey Jay

Calandria K

Gay Jay

Sorghum Bill

Georgia Cody

WS Chestnut

1977 World Champion AQHA Open Jr. Cutting

1978 Top Ten World Show, 3rd Open Sr. Cut

NRHA money earner

NCHA money earner, COA Bronze Silver Award

ROM Performance 1978 Open

Performance Point Earner

Mr San Peppy was tired from years of hauling...he had just won his second NCHA World Championship and had become the first cutting horse to earn $100,000. Freckles Playboy won the work-off and made Mr San Peppy look like a novice horse that day.

A year or two later, Freckles Playboy won the huge AQHA Senior Cutting at the Houston Livestock Show with a score of 152, I think. That doesn't sound all that high, as scores go, today. But, in those days, judging was much more conservative and a score of 146 to 148

would have usually won any cutting contest that had two judges. Freckles Playboy was awesome.....

CL Collins, Twenty Two Ranch

Hollywood Gold

Hollywood Gold was one of the ranch stallions for the 6666 Ranch. He was an own son of Gold Rush( by Caliente) and Triangle Lady 17( Triangle Ranch mare). Hollywood Gold was one of the working ranch horses at the 6666 Ranch and was only shown in local ranch cuttings, roppings, and ect. "He was a Natural", said J.J. Gibson, it wasn't something he was taught because you can't teach it( cow sense), had a good nature, big pretty soft eyes, quick and smart ( could out think any cow in a hurry) and passed these traits on to his get". He sired some good sons, but his own daughters and grand-daughters went on to become cutting champions. Some of his get are: Hollywood Lin and Hollywood Cat ( NCHA Hall of Fame), Hollywood Ollie, Hollywood Snapper, and Mr Gold 95( NCHA Silver Awards), Miss Hollywood, and Hollywood Boy. Gibson seys, "None of us realized how great this horse was. I don't suppose we even started noticing until we took a good look at how his offspring were working on the ranch. They were all just like their daddy. We really didn't know how good he was until he was gone".